Exploring Relations to Documents and Documentary Infrastructures: The Case of Museum Management After Austerity

Bethany Rex

Abstract


Interaction with documents and documentary infrastructure is part of the day to day reality of museum work. However, their constitutive and mediatory role is rarely foregrounded in empirical studies of museums. In part, this is because a defined theoretical and methodological framework for such an investigation has yet to be developed. This article outlines what a conceptualisation of documents as more-than-text informed by actor-network theory offers to studies of museums, particularly the potential of this method for investigating how documentary infrastructures influence daily practice and inform notions of possible action amongst museum staff. The insight that institutional practices operate ‘on the field of possibilities’ is Foucault’s ([1982] 2000: 341). However, as I outline in this article, actor-network theory took up this insight and developed it, drawing out its methodological and analytical consequences. Empirical material exploring the influence of Arts Council England’s Accreditation Scheme on someone new to museum work, drawn from a study of community asset transfer, a process whereby people new to museum work become responsible for the operation and management of museums previously run by local authorities, is used to demonstrate the potential of this approach.

Keywords


austerity; community asset transfer; expertise; actor-network theory; organizational culture; methodologies; document analysis

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DOI: https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v16i2.2781



Copyright (c) 2018 Bethany Rex

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Museum and Society

ISSN 1479-8360

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